FILE PHOTO: Daniel Melhorn drives his combine through a field of soybeans in Danville, Pa., Wednesday afternoon Nov. 12, 2008 as three whitetail deer move from one section of corn to another behind the harvester. Melhorn picks about 800 bushels of soybeans every two to three hours.

Gov. Wolf derides ‘lack of strategy’ in Trump’s trade approach

"Farmers I've talked to say it actually is a Band-Aid."

Katie is a reporter for PA Post and she hosts its political podcast State of the State. For two years she has covered the legislature, governor, and a wide range of political issues for public radio stations across Pennsylvania.

(Harrisburg) — Governor Tom Wolf is raising the alarm over the impact Chinese tariffs are having on Pennsylvania’s farmers.

President Donald Trump’s tariffs on foreign aluminum and steel may have boosted the domestic steel industry, but China’s retaliatory tariffs on American crops have hurt exports from Pennsylvania farms.

It’s a plight the federal government has acknowledged.

The $12 billion aid package the Trump administration passed to help farmers got mixed reception in the commonwealth. Groups like the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau oppose it.

A bigger aid package is being proposed now. Wolf, a Democrat, said he doesn’t think it’s the right approach.

“Farmers I’ve talked to say it actually is a Band-Aid,” he said. “Why are we doing that? Why don’t we address the underlying, root-cause problem which is we maybe don’t have a fair trading system.”

Wolf said he’d rather Trump lean more on the World Trade Organization.

“It’s not just the tariffs,” he said. “I think there’s chaos surrounding the tariffs. There’s a frustrating lack of strategy on the part of the administration.”

NPR also interviewed Republican Nebraska Governor Pete Ricketts, who said he thinks it is worth weathering bad times in the agriculture industry if it leads to better trade relationships.